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Why are children fascinated by the ugliest toys?

Why is it that the most popular of kids' toys are ugly? And I don't just mean ugly. I mean ugly like the mutating globs of left-over dinner that's stuck in the sink drain.

Perhaps there's a toy designer named Arnold who ran out of ideas and, searching for a gimmick that would please the stockholders, complained to his wife that his job was on the line unless he came up with a new toy that would make all children everywhere annoy their parents with endless pleas: "Please, I just gotta have this new toy! If you don't get it for me real soon, I'll hold my breath until I start looking like this toy I want, and then the neighbors will think you kidnapped me from an alien planet, and Geraldo Rivera will harass you to get me on his show. . . ."

Listening to this, Arnold's wife, probably did what any normal wife would do: She told him to wash the dishes. Whereupon he stared at the globs in the sink and behold! An idea was born.

A few years ago, every kid had to have the Masters of the Universe -- heroes and villains grossly deformed with muscles on the outside of their bodies and who, spiritually speaking, in no way reflected the true Master.

Not only that, but they had all the charm and wit of sink globs, graphically illustrated in their daily half-hour commercials, entitled Stay Tuned for Yet Another Exciting Episode.

What's the fascination with ugliness?

Remember the Cabbage Patch craze? Those dolls made me shudder because they reminded me of how my real babies might have looked if, when I was pregnant, I'd bounced around inside a giant pinball game. They were so popular, grown-ups beat each other up just to buy one. Why hasn't Barbie caused such a stampede?

And now we have Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles [editor's update: and Pokémon creatures]. What every child needs -- or so I'm told by my kids.

"Play with the globs of oatmeal in the sink," I say. "They look just like the Turtles."

The Turtles were created when some boy carelessly dropped his pet turtles into the city sewer, and as luck would have it (as is always the case in Stay Tune for the Next Exciting Episode) a bad guy added green ooze to the sewer gunk, right where those turtles were gagging. And you know what green ooze does. It mutated those unfortunate pets into teenagers.

Mix that with mutant frogs, ducks, rabbits, rats, warthogs, rhinos, flies and alligators, and stir in a living rock and a bodiless, gun-toting brain, and you have what every child needs for good mental health -- toy nightmares.

Perhaps ugly toys are popular because they help kids and their grown-up counterparts cope with the ugliness and cruelty of this world. As Christians, however, we have an advantage in that the deeper our relationship with Jesus Christ is, the more we have His peace and help in coping with whatever is ugly in our lives. And as stewards of God's gifts, we are called to bring His beauty into the world.

This means, of course, being careful not to drop our pets into the sewer. And never, never feed green ooze to the globs in sink drains.

© 1990 by Terry A. Modica
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